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Reconstruction (1865-1876)

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Title: Reconstruction (1865-1876) Author: Susan M. Pojer Last modified by: kt Created Date: 1/2/2005 9:30:52 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reconstruction (1865-1876)


1
Reconstruction (1865-1876)
2
Essential Question
  • In what ways did Reconstruction begin to help
    African Americans in the South?

3
  • What does it
  • mean to
  • RECONSTRUCT something?

4
Key Questions
1. How do webring the Southback into the Union?
4. What branchof governmentshould controlthe
process ofReconstruction?
2. How do we rebuild the South after
itsdestruction during the war?
3. How do weintegrate andprotect
newly-emancipatedblack freedmen?
5
President Lincolns Plan
  • 10 Plan
  • Pardon crimes for Confederate officers
  • to convince them to join union
  • accept end to slavery
  • Replace majority rule with loyal rule in the
    South.
  • Plan would be recognized when 10 of the voting
    population in the 1860 election had taken an oath
    of loyalty

6
Wade-Davis Bill (1864)
  • By Radical Republicans
  • Wanted terms much more difficult for southern
    whites to accept
  • made it impossible for Confederate states
  • RESULT Less confederate states would return to
    Union

SenatorBenjaminWade(R-OH)
CongressmanHenryW. Davis(R-MD)
7
13th Amendment
  • Ratified in December, 1865.
  • Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except
    as punishment for crime whereof the party shall
    have been duly convicted, shall exist within the
    United States or any place subject to their
    jurisdiction.
  • Abolished slavery

8
President Andrew Johnson
  • Elected after Lincoln was assassinated

9
President Johnsons Plan (10)
  • Made most Confederate states eligible for pardons
    if they became loyal
  • Created easy terms so Confederate states could
    return to their place in Union
  • States had to hold constitutional convention
  • Write new constitution to void
  • Slavery
  • Ratify 13th Amendment
  • Stop payments of state war debts

10
Things didnt work out
  • Many Southern state constitutions fell short of
    minimum requirements.
  • Revival of the South

BLACK CODES
11
Black Codes
  • Purpose
  • Guarantee stable labor
  • Forced many blacks to become sharecroppers
  • Plantation owners would rent land to black
    families.
  • Give 1/3 of crop to plantation owner

12
Emergence of Sharecropping
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  • 5 min

13
Freedmens Bureau
14
Essential Question
  • In what ways did the Freedmens Bureau meet
    resistant from Southerners during the beginning
    of Reconstruction?

15
Freedmens Bureau (1865)
  • Congress forms the Freedmens Bureau.
  • Counteracts the Black Codes
  • Called carpetbaggers by white southern
    Democrats.

16
Freedmens Bureau (1865)
  • Organized to help ex-slaves with
  • Food
  • medical care
  • resettlement
  • education

17
Carpetbaggers
  • Term in which Southerners gave to Northerners who
    moved to South during Reconstruction
  • Carpetbaggers were
  • seen as sneaky
  • Northern outsiders with
  • questionable objectives

18
Freedmens Bureau Seen Through Southern Eyes
Plenty to eat and nothing to do.
19
Successes of Freedmens Bureau
  • Gained support quickly from African Americans
  • Elected as officials by African American voters
  • Built
  • Schools
  • Churches
  • Modernize the South

20
Struggles of Freedmens Bureau
  • Were accused of having ulterior motives
  • Were not looking out for the best interest of
    African Americans

21
Freedmens Bureau School
22
Slavery is Dead?
1866- Ku Klux Klan Whites attack on
Reconstruction Between 1868-1871 whites launched
a counterrevolution against the changes of
Reconstruction
23
DocumentaryMarshall TwitchellA representative
of the Freedmens Bureau working in Louisiana
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  • 5 min

24
EXIT TICKET
  • Do you think the creation of the Freedmens
    Bureau helped or hindered the struggle for
    equality for African Americans?

25
The Road to EqualityEssential Question
  • How did the 14th and 15th Amendment allow for
    change during the Reconstruction Era?

26
14th Amendment
  • Ratified in July, 1868.
  • Provide a constitutional guarantee
  • for rights of freed people.
  • Southern states would be punished
  • denying the right to vote to black citizens!

27
15th Amendment
  • Ratified in 1870.
  • The right of citizens of the United States to
    vote shall not be denied or abridged by the
    United States or by any state on account of race,
    color, or previous condition of servitude.
  • It gives black males the right to vote.

28
WORD SPLASH
  • Amnesty Act
  • Compromise of 1877
  • Andrew Johnson
  • Abraham Lincoln
  • 14th Amendment
  • 15th Amendment
  • Freedmens Bureau
  • Military Reconstruction Act of 1867
  • Carpetbaggers
  • Scalawags
  • Ku Klux Klan
  • sharecroppers
  • Tenant farmers
  • Rutherford Hayes

29
Reconstruction Effects Radical Reconstruction
30
Essential Question
  • What were the political, social and economic
    changes that occurred during the Reconstruction
    Era and how did these reforms impact African
    Americans and white southerners?

31
The First StepsPolitical
  • Three Reconstruction Acts are passed.
  • Military Reconstruction Act
  • Command of Army Act
  • Tenure of Office Act

32
Reconstruction Acts of 1867
  • Military Reconstruction Act (1st)
  • Divide the 10 unreconstructed states
  • into 5 military districts.

33
Reconstruction Acts of 1867
  • Command of the Army Act (2nd)
  • President issue all Reconstruction
  • orders through
  • the commander of the military
  • Tenure of Office Act (3rd)
  • The President could not remove any officials
    without the Senates
  • consent
  • Designed to protect radicalmembers of Lincolns
    government.

34
  • Black Senate House Delegates
  • African Americans began to be elected to public
    offices

35
Social Steps
  • Organized conventions to fight for
  • Right to vote
  • Equal access to schools
  • Transportation
  • And to use public facilities
  • Slave marriages began to have legal standing
  • Maintained strong family ties
  • through churches

36
(No Transcript)
37
Economic Steps
  • Type of work didnt really change
  • African Americans found
  • jobs in
  • Cities
  • Women became
  • domestic servants
  • Sharecropping

38
John R. Lynch and Legislation
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  • 5 min

39
EXIT TICKET
  • Wrap up 3-2-1
  • Write down
  • 3 ways that life improved for African Americans
  • 2 problems African Americans still faced
  • 1 reason that white southerners were upset

40
End of Reconstruction
41
Essential Question
  • What ways did Reconstruction begin to end?

42
The Invisible Empire of the South
43
The Failure of Federal Enforcement
  • Enforcement Acts of 1870 1871 also known as
    the KKK Act.
  • The Lost Cause.
  • Gave federal government
  • power to punish violators.

44
The Amnesty Act of 1872
  • It removes the restrictions placed on Confederate
    office-holders.

45
The Civil Rights Act of 1875
  • Prohibited discrimination for any reason
  • Shortcoming ? lacked a strong
    enforcement mechanism.
  • No new civil rights act was attemptedfor 90
    years!

46
1876 Presidential Tickets
47
Hayes Prevails
48
A Political Crisis The Compromise of 1877
  • Southern Democrats wanted Federal Troops out of
    South
  • Federal Troops pushed and continued
    Reconstruction
  • Southern Democrats wanted Reconstruction to end

49
The Compromise of 1877
  • Presidential election between Hayes and Tilden
  • Tilden won
  • However Hayes promised if he was President he
    would remove federal troops from southern states
  • Democrats allowed for Hayes to become President
  • Federal troops left the South

50
EXIT TICKET
  • If there really was an end to Reconstruction and
    African Americans were given the same rights as
    whites, why was there a Civil Rights Movement
    almost 90 years later?
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